Democrat and sentinel. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1853-1866, March 08, 1865, Page 2, Image 2

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51. IX ASSO-V, CdKor & 1'ubllslicr ,
WEBIESBAY MMttl 8. 1865.
S. EL Petteugill & Co.
Advertising Agents, 37 Park Row i
New York, and 10 State street, Uoston,
are the authorized Agents for the "Dem
ocrat & Sentinel," and the most influen
tial and largest circulating Newspapers in
the Uuited States and Canadas. They
are empowered to contract for us at out
LOWEST TERMS.
C'OLWTY CO.W.MIiTCB.
P. S. NOON, Chairman,
George Pelanv, J. S. Mardis, George C.
K. Zahm. Petcr'Huber. Philip Miller. John
K. Mefvenzio. Joseph Behe, John Durbin,
David Farner. Henry Friedthoof. John
Stough, Klisha l'lummer, Lewis Rodgers,
George Gurlt-y, John McDcrmit. JSimon
Dunmyer, YV. A. Knse. Th s. F. McGough.
Jacob Fronheiser, J. F. Condm, John Ham
llton, F. O'Friel, Michael B hlin, Wm. C.
Diver, John White, Heary Topper, Nicho
las Carman, M. J. Plott. J. W. Condon.
Daniel Canfair, Wm. McC'oskey. Daniel H
Donnelly, Anthony Long, John Marsh,
John it van.
Decay of Our Country.
Wherever we turn our steps through
this once favored land, we see palpable
evidence of our country's downfall. A
great many of the bone and sinew of the
country, the1 'real producers, have left,
many of them to return no more. Our
agricultural population is now composed
of old men, cripples, women and children
In some of the townships in this County
there are scarcely as many men left as
would keep the fences arid farm in good
order without cultivating the soil at all.
Kvery man within the age of Lincoln's
grasp without physical debility who was
not able to purchase a substitute or who
had not paid his money in lHG'c, has
either enlisted in the army or left, for
parts unknown. Many even who were
beyond the Administration, young men
of intellect and industry have gone to
Mexico, and left this Government which
was once the pride and boast of the civi
lized world.
It is a sure indication of a nations de
cay to see the young, the stalwart and
healthy leaving the hearths and the graves
of their fathers, the associations of youth
and the endearments of home and friends,
to better their condition under another
government where every disadvantage
awaits them for some time, even the lan
guage is strange to them. This they are
fully aware of, but they are aware also
that energy and industry will in a short
time surmount all these difficulties. Nor
would they have gone had thcro been one
single ray of hope left to them that this
country would ever be what it once has
been. They saw and felt that no people
on the fice of the earth wa3 ever fo
shabbily used by a government, as the
people of these States have been for the
last three years. The Government en
tirely impoverished this County by taking
commutation from them. Kvery dollar
they could scrape up was handed over to
tho Government, and after that was done,
the men are either taken into the army or
exiled to a foreign land. If any man of
any party had been placed at the head of
this Government, and selected a Cabinet
from the worst men to be found four years
ago, we would consider him making good
destructive progress to have changed the
country so much a-i it has been in these
few years. We can't ignore the facts,
but we blame nobody. It has not come
to the worst yet, wo fear that the North
as well as the South has a hard destiny
in store for themselves.
Every producer I
thut has left the country takes so much
wealth out of it. Every one of this class
that goes takes his labor out of the
country. What is greenbacks compared
with lone and muscle ? It is ras, in-
digo and lampblack, and one strong arm
is worth a ship load of this stuff. We
ece the evidence already of a great want ;
01 cultivators of the soil even in this !
county ; and while it is visible here it will ton by way of the Kichmond and Danville
be much more so in other p irts of the j railroad and in the meantime successfully
country, for this never was much of an j "old Grant at bay, then Sherman's po
agriculturnl County. All the other j fition may become one of creat r, ;t
uiiuiLiH o ji uiuusiiy m o sunering m
iln unl 1 . ..1 . . f ?.-..7... .. n . . V
the
kame way.
Our railroads arc overworked ud suf
fering for want of operatives ; the com- of thousands cannot much longer be de
panies must man the roads with such as j layed and it may already have been
they can get and the consequence is that reached. That the struggle will be bitter
more lives are lost of the travelling com- and the sacrifice of life dreadful, is not to
munity since the drafting business com- I be doubted. .Sherman is an educated and
menced. than had been done for many accomplished general and his victorious
years previous. This is part and parcel legions will not permit their well earned
of the universal decay, ruin and degrada- laurels to be torn from their brows with
tion of the country. Nor is its downfall out a fearful effort, while on the other
of morals less visable in the communitv',
than in a physical point of view. Men
who would heretofore shudder at the idea
of cheating, stealing, lieing or perjury, go
at it now with unwashed hands. They
will steal, lie and commit perjury with
regard to contracts, substitutes and ex
emptions, and many of them think they
are not doing wrong, as they have to do
these tilings to save themselves. Thev
have adopted the theory of the Govern
iueiit, when they trampled on the Consti
tution, and abrogated the rights of the
States and the citizens. 44 Military ne
cessity," this suits all purposes and is a
universal panacea for all moral or political
diseases. There can bo no mistaking the
signs of the times. Our country is gone,
irretrievably lost, if a kind Providence
will not interfere in our beh-ilf and avert
the danger that seems to hover over a
ruined and broken down country. We
can with the utmost truth exclaim in the
words of a favorite poet.
Alas! for our country her jrHe has gone by.
AuJ the spirit is broken that n-.-vtr would
bend.
O'er lar ruius her children in secret must
sigh,
For 'tis treason to love Ler aud death to
defend.
Unprised are her sons till they learn to
betray,
Undistinguished tl ey live if they shame
not their fires,
And the torch, that would light them to
-dignity's way,--"""- .
Must be caught from the pile where our
f- counti y expires.
The Comlngr Struggle.
At no period since the commencement
of the rebellion, have the armies -of the
North and South occupied positions, more
certain to bring about a succession of
bloody battles, than the present. Iiepub
lican soothsayers may predict tho utter
annihilation of the Confederate armies
from the recent reverses they have sus
tained, but the wish is father to the
thought. Ever since the fall of Fort
Surapter, Seward has announced the
speedy downfall of the rebellion and has
periodically drawn his drafts on opular
credulity, in favor of that event, payable
ninety days after date. His misfortune, a.
well as that of the lesser lights of his
party, has been like Casundrus who waa
eternally uttering prophesies but was
never once believed. As a military s?or he j Dctn n:,- ior uniting the creeds. During
has become the butt of hi- own country- j service the Episcopalians furnished the
men as well as the laughing stock of all j ,",,-ii !l,'d sang the "gloria in crr.Jci?,"
the statesmen of Europe. The cacua- j 1,1(2 nieence creed, omitting according to
tion by the rebels, of Savannah, Charles- I tl,e liturgy of the oriental church the
ton and Wilmington does not necessarily ovUjUinrjue in the sentence. Kni f J
cripple or weaken the strength of the i ilt'e .fib 'j ' j'rortIit.'" This word seems
Confederates, but simply enables them to
concentrate all their available forces, fur a
more vigorous and determined resistance.
That they are thus uniting all the scattered
fragments of their armies and throwing
them into North Carolina, to arrest the
progress of Si.ernian towards Kiehmond, is
evident from all the information wc can
receive. Grant and Lee confront each
otlur in the immediate neighborhood of
Petersburg. Judging from former failures,
neither can dislodge the other and if
Grant makes an attack on lice's right, it
will be for the purpose of keeping Ix-e's
army in stufu tuo and prevent him from
sending reinforcements to Johnston. We
have no news of Sherman's movements
since he occupied Columbia the Capital
of South Carolina. That he did not
uiarcu on naruate in .onn caroinia, a i
town which is directly North of Colum
bia, is propi from the fact, that Johns
ton's headquarters arc, or were a few
days ago, at the former place. As Sher-
man's great object was to firm a junction
with the forces under Schofield and
Terry, he has most likely marched in a
north easterly direction from Columbia, who are always prepared to enter into a
with a design of effecting the junction j contract to do the blush-ring and if neces
either at Fayetteville or Goldsboro. pary th J'U!tt"3 le Abolition party
W hether he will succeed in doing so or ' d "ring a political campaign, have been
not is a mere mutter of conjecture."
If
he dots then in our opinion, the evacua-
t'wn of Kichmond becomes a military ne-
cessity. Hut if Lee can reinforce Johns- '
Lichmnnd is the stake played for and hu
man lives the dice that are thrown. The
awfgl pHU-c between tlie life and death
hand, the veterans of Johnston and Lee
will fight with all the energy of despair.
Will the result, whatever it may be, end
the war and restore peace. We think
not.
Proposed liilon.
On last week a Russian lMost a grad
uate of the eclesiastical academy of St.
Petersburg celebrated divine service ac
cording to the orthodox oriential church
in Trinity chapel near Ihoadvvay. It
was said to be very interesting to the cler
gy and laity of the American Episcopal
church. The circumstance has peculiar
significance at this time, when the ques
tion of a fraternization between the Eng
lish and American Episcopal church on
the one side and llussian Greek on the
other is beginning to be widetv agitated.
After the Kussian fleet w hich was an-
chored at New York returned home, they
reported that they found many Russians
and Sclavonics in that city and in San
francisco who wore without a priest to
administer the consolations of religion to
them in that form of worship which was
most dear to them. Consequently this
priest having obtained M.rmis:on of the
metropolitan of Athens and the holy syn
od of Greece to visit this continent as a
missionary, got leave to come here. He
lost no time in availiug himself of the
opportunity, -ind has already established
a parrish in the heart of New York city,
hav ing obt aiuc-J the Sunday school-room
of St. John's church until he is letter
provided for, which can soon be done if
the Episcopalians of that city can make
their creeds agree. They are rich. In
there was a general convention held
in New York city composed of Episeopa- '
bans. They appointed a Kusso Greek
committee to take into consideration the
expediency of opening a "correspondence
with the Greek church, with a view to
mutual advantage in the practice of faith,
and to form a jovvcrful opjiosiiion to the
wide spreading influence of the See of
Koine. Similar initiatory steps were
taken in England at the some time, and
for the same object. The interchange of
ideas was had between the American
clergy and the leading prelates of the
Greek church and a spirit of amnity pre
vails but as yet no definite scheme has
' to c "e 01 l',c Causes of the schism be
tween the eastern and western" churches.
The Episcopalians sang the responses and
seemed to be very tractable for the time.
If the people of England are as anxious to
get out of their religion as the people of
New York seem to be, we have no doubt
they can get together. Hut they must go
over entirely to the Greeks, they will not
be met half way. The lieporter of the
World says:
This event may prove 10 be the fore
runner of the Union of the great English
aud Kussian churches, the members of
which claim to agree in the essential arti
cles of faith. The kindly feeling existing
between America and Kussia as lately
evidenced; and the proposed opening of
telegraphic commuuication by way of
j Kamchatka between New York and St
Petersburg, it is thought will under the
circumstances, render speedily practicable
a coalition that has been desired by the
Protestants at least for more than a cen
tury. tar Jt is a singular fact, that whiln
in
SU,UJ instances, certain men of this C
ounty.
j pronounced incouipetant to perform mil;.
tary duty by the Provost Marshall and
his assistants, cei tain other citizens, no
toriously unfit, are supplied with a free
ticket for th? land of Ihxie. The mystery
becomes the greater, from the fact, that
the members of the board, are known to
be men, who, like Caesar's wife are not
only pure but beyond suspicion. liut as
Sam Patch said, " sorne things can be
done an well a others.'1
Tlic Inaugural A!dres.
To-day we publish our worthy Presi- j
dents inaugural. As we have observed !
no public document bearing any resem- '
blance to it since the days that the Apos- 1
tie Paul wrote to the Collosians, Philip- j
pians and Thessalonians, we consider it ;
too sacred an instrument for our comments
at the present time. j
Mr. Lincoln's Inaugural Address was
as follows : !
Fellow Countrymen : At this second j
appearing to take the oath of the Presi- I
oei.tial otiice there is less occasion for an '
extended address than there was at first, j
Then a statement of a course to be pur-
sued seemed very fitting and proper. j
"Now. at the expiration of four years, 1
during which public declarations" have I
been constantly called forth 011 every
point and phase of the great contest which j
still absorbs the attention and engrosses !
the energies of the nation, little that is j
new could be presented. I
44 1 he progress of our armies, upon
which all else chic-lly dends, is as well
known to the public as to myself, and it
is, I trust, reasonably satisfactory and
encouraging to all. With high hope for
the future, no prediction in regard to it
is ventured.
44 On the occasion corresponding to
this, four years ago, till thoughts were
anxiously directed to an impending ciil
war. All dreaded it ; all sought to avoid
it-
W bile the Inaugural Address was be
ing delivered from tins -.-'place, devoted
altogether to saving the Union without
war, insurgent- agents were in the city
seeking to destroy it without war; seek
ing to dissolve the Union and divide the
c tll-cls by negotiation. Uoth parties dep
recated the war, but one ot ihetu would
make war rather than let the nation sur
vive, and the other would accept war
rather than let it periah, aud -the war
came.
One eighth of the whole ovulation
were colored slaves, not disiribuled gen- i
traily over the Union, but localized irM he '
southern part of it. These slaves conii- !
tuted a jteculiar and powerful interest. !
All knew that this interest was some how !
the c.use of the war. To strengthen, J
perpetuate and extend this interest was
the object for which the insurgents would J
rend the Union by war, while the ov- j
eminent claimed no right to do more 1
than restrict the territorial enlargement j
of it.
Neither party expected for the war the
magnitude or tii duration which it has;
already attained. Neither anticipated
that the cause of the conflict might cease, !
or even before ihe conflict itself should
cease. Each looked lor an easier tri
umph, and a result less fundamental and
astounding. j
loth read the same bible and pray to !
the same God, and each invokes Ills aid i
against the other. It may seem strange i
j that ny men should dare to ask a just j
God's assistance in wringing their bread
j from the sweat of other men's faces, but !
j let us judge not, that we may not be j
judged. Ihe praers of" both should not '
be answered. That of neither has b en 1
answered fully. The Almighty has his j
own purposes. Woe unto the world be- t
cause of oil! rices, ILn it must needs be;
that offences conie, but woe to the man ;
by whom the otienses come;h. If we i
shall suppose that American slaverv is !
... . i-. 1 . 1
o..e 01 iiieseoiicnscs wt.uh, in the Provi
dence of God, must needs come, but
which having continued through His ap
pointed time, He now wills to remove,
and that He gives to both North and
Vouth this terrible war as the woe due to I
those by whom the otlenee came. I
Shall we discern there, is any depart- j
u re from those Divine attiibul'es which j
the believers in a living (Jul always as- j
cube to? Fondly do we hope, fervently!
do we pray, that this scourge of war may j
sjeediv pass away. Yet, if God wills !
that it continue until all the wealth piled !
by the bondman's two hundred and lift v j
thousand years of our. ...mt.-.l t,,;i C, ,H I
be sunk, and until every drop of blood j
uiawn vviiii the lash shai he i.a d bv
; other drawn with the sword, as was said
miee thousand years ago, so, still it must
I md, the judgements of the Lord are
true and righteous altogether.
ith malice toward no one, with
chanty for .. wj,j4 !;,.,(. jM ti,e rj,,,t)
let us strive on to finish the work we are
in, to l,n,d lm n.lt;0s wound, to care
tor him who shall l.nvo tl .. l,...ti..
and for his widows aud orphai-s, to do all 1
"...v... may achieve and cherish a jjst
and lasting p,,.. uinung ourselves aud
with all nations.
TlIE Il.I.t si i:a n. i 1 'n i.'i.'vi ii ti t 1 1 .17i i,
..... A ,ft It 1... .l.wi 1 I ... ... V'V (
N AI. for March, nmlnitu finv- 1-Vnton i.f !
Nevy York : Edward 'Everett, the Orator;
Major Davidson, the Patriot Aristotlo, the '
Philosopher : Charles Fourier, tho Social- j
1st ; . II. Fiy, thrt composer ; with I
Portraits and Uioraphies. The races of !
Men; Causasians, Mongolians, Ethiopi- j
ans, American Indians, and Malayans, !
with Grouded portraits of each, and a i
Map showin2 the Geographical distribu- j
tion of Mankind, w ith seventeen illnstra- I
tions. Also Physiognomy, or 44 signs of ;
character," Love under difficulties, Fore- '
eceirifr, and 44 Seeing at See," etc. An 1
excellent Number. Only 20 cts., by first
post, or 2 a year. Address Messrs. j
Fowi.kr & Wells, 3 SO Hroadwav.
N. Y, '
Horace Grcly aud Henry nurd
llc'clier.
The last pla-e we hear of these bene
factors of negroes and women, were at
the first annual commencement of a medi
cal college for females in the IJroadway
Athenieum formerly the church of the '.
Messiah. The church was tilled to over
flowing with womens" rights nun and wo
men. The degree of M. 13. was con
ferred on fifteen females, and Horrace and
Henry made both flaming .qx eches, und
regretted very much that stumbling blocks
were placed in the way of females, in
attaining the medical profession. Horace
prophesied that in less than twenty years
females would be the leading physicians
of the country. Pee her sai l he would
say that they should have a chance, that
the stumbling blocks should be put out of
the way, and if they wish to make doc
tors of themselves let them try it. When
the aristocracy, such as the dutches of
Southerland or the dutches of Devonshire
wish to have woman's rights or any other
rights they will have them.
Corrcsponbenct.
Lk Claiue, Iowa. Feb. 13, 18G5.
As it takes. your humble servant a little
longer and a little more room to tell his
unpretending stories, 3 011 and your readers
will not fail to excuse the 44 brokt-n-w in I
ed" nature of some of the subjects I
shall treat upon hen-alter. In 1113- last, I
told you I would ive my views in relation
to the American clergy and their unrighte
ous influence in th politics "f the comitrv,
which has resulted in the dismcmU-rmcIit
of the original Union and lik.-Iv too in
the future keep beyond a possibility of a
reunion.
'Ihe author of the bogus pmclamali ai
(lieau Hackft) after his release burn Port
Lafayette, in a letter to the Chicago
Tones, remarked: that he had route to
the conclusion that lie mis occnial t.
,." '
I think his case wi:i romp-ue favorable
with 44 our country:" that it was 4 go
verned too much " and too by a pack of
white eravated sneak-. It would seem
the great poet William Cow per, well un
derstood the general ', Progress of Error"
when disseminated by such fiithv low
bred lying hypocrite, when he saiu :
' N wild enthusiast ever vt t ei-uid km.
Till half mankind ware iike him.-e I pos
sessed, rhilosfphcis, who darken and lit rut
Kleriial truth by evcl istu.g 4!,,i. i.t ;
Church quaiks, .with pursii-tis u..ocr no o-m
m.tnd.
Who fill the world with doctrine contr?
band, Discover-! of th-y know nut wh.it, c n
lined Within no bounds tie blind that l.ad tie
bl ml "
Don't that fit tlx gi ntlemeu's ru-e, ex
actly ? As the Christian minister and
thi? Church is considered a "good ihinj-,"
; n"l from tlu m inuch i-s tj,:i f. in that
line and the people (or a certain portion)
swallow as truth without . xamin iiior:,
everything that comes from that source,
so that if they (the clergy) err, the !e
hevers will follow in the train, not even
doubting. The war to-day has desolated
a great portion ot o ir country and yet
bids fair to not leave one .-lone upon an
other has lx 011 brought alv-.tit bv 44 run-
traband" doct lines promulgated bv ihj
clergy from the intended to tie sa-.-i -d "h ss.
There is where the evil can b traced. Ii
was a grand point that Douglas made
against the clergy an I the churches, when
he charged disunion upon them. As h
said, Disunion bejm in the Chun lies,
they split oil and were kn-r.vu as the
Methodist Church Xo: -t ' M :i,odit
Church Suiit " and in like tho other
various denominations. Wh re harmoiiy
should have existed in the churches, dis
sension an I discord provoked disunion.
Then when the preacher tunic 1 politician,
the matters of the State would n-ifurally
fall in'o bad hands, :,s witness the bloody
wars of Europe caused by the mixing the
Church with Stale Nouinvvi sr.
Southern Xcun.
From the liiehmond Enquirer, Pel- '27 j
The Yankee gc:fcva!s Crook and Kelh-y,
and the adjutant-general of the former.
Thayer Melvin. anived in Iiichmoiut yes
terday morning at two o'clock 1.3- the
Central cars. As previously stau-d, these
officers when captured in Cumberland,
Maryland, on Tuesday last, by Lieu
tenant McNeill an I thiity men. From one
of the party engaged in this dashing and
brilliant enterprise tv learn the lolanving
incidents of the capture: The party cross
ed the Potomac in front of the town at a
late hour on the night of ihe event and
capturing the only sentintl to be seen,
induced him to divulga the countersign.
The main body of the detachment was
then jKisted in u convenient position, and
Ihe lieutenant commanding, with sevend
of the men, boldly rode into the town,
which was garrisoned by over four hun
dred federal troops. The headquarters of
General Crook were at one hotel and
those of General Kelly at another, and
their locations being duly made known by
the captured sentinel, the daring parti
sans made their way to those of the far
mer, arriving just in front of which the
lieutenant halted and inquired of ti e s.r
tinel if the general was in. Keceivin-'
affirmative reply, he said he had iuLm
tant dispatches for him, and dismounti:,--followed
by Lis men, advanced to
sentinel, gave the counteisign, an 1
in. upon enteri:.g the hotel, th... .J.j
was received by an old negro wotl,,
who, it appears, was the 44 ni-dit ci r'-
of the establishment; and upon ;,;.;,
known their desire to be eunducn-i . .
room of General Crook, the old tie!',..',,
looked at them with a kind ot !i-i;n ,r . j
suspicion, and remarked, 44 Weil vil ;
is tie strangest soldiers, I deeiai-Lv,,u
you must lake de light yo' selves
fust.. I'll pint de room out to yu pj
won't carry y u dar, dough, no -It
did not make any diiTuvnoe tj .
bolJ cavaliers which method t'h- old
man preferred ; thev- took th-; ligi;t
the lead, and in a moment or two
in front of the door, where the oi l wmj r
hastiiy left them Aiier several in l'.,.
tual raps, a response from withh,
obtained, at:d the visitors were orderoi ,
enter.
44 Is this General Crook ?" asked tL
lieutenant, holding thelight so as Jo g-,8
him full view of the general as he Jro.
sily looked at them from Ins bed.
Yes ; what do you Wi.nt !" vvj.8 ;l,
reply.
44 I," said the lieutenant, 44 am Gondii
IIost;" ainJ, drawing a pistol t-ij p.
senting it, added : 4 I have som vtrr
important business with you, GcwJ
Crook, ttnd will give you precise!?
minutes to get up and put on you?
clothes." '
The bewildered general did not knew
how to reply, and did not dare to rcLi
I le saw at a glance that it vvo.ill b:
useless as dangerous to attempt c-e-ijn- U
rr.isiiiu an alarm, and he did not t y vj
solve the misery of so mie.;;ect-.d a
Ileob-vtii at once, and a g-;i'.:-- t.
ion lit the propriety of k i j i: i: ;
bving whispered in bis ear, h ? p ss-.-t ua
with ins escort .is mute as a 11.' :ir.u,.
Oil their egress ihe party poiu i ,1 ;..
s iitinel on duty to follow them i,v :
lcc merits similar to those stilaai-.s- .i :
ihe g n :d. and making tluii ;:-,.:, :
momi! iieiiin 1 them, rode back t.j :.
main body. J:i t:.- m.iOi'ime a s-.n.:-detachment
ii!e mi tii the mi.-'r!. '
i 1
Genera! Kelly, where a similar sevi.t
c'irre, and that c flic r was, in due ii.;-,
under guard. lint the party wasn ti.-.
tent Ascertainiuii the ipiarters i f ; -adjutant---,
nr. a!. They g-ive t.ia 1 p.
ing call, lb 1 n 1 him io t.ed with l.i ;-,
who happened, oh, pity him ve Ii.:.
diets I to be a blushing bride, and as t -eir.ptorily,
but us gentle as passible i .!
the ri:-i-uiustaiice, succeeded in ' v -.-ting"
from a blissful bridegrooui ii:u
miserable p:or devil of a pris:-r. T:
capping the climax of the ni-ht's
the rendezvous was ivgained, and .:.
t!air prisoners ruling bchiml ib.-m. t:t
command recrossed the river,
away through Hampshire. Uv
means thu affair was discover, i v.
after they left, and a whole n-i-v-M j :
sued them to no p!irio-e ler ! !' . -iihii
In'mg presi nted to General Ivirn it
his headqoaiteis in she vallev. tie- j-r:-r-
el s wei e rccci", ed with the ho ::' iv.
no doubt, acceptable cr. etinj : "" !
seats, gentlem-in, I presume von are ::
aiier your rid-," and then ad-i. d tin !
of brilliant victoiies and strnnu g 1! !. '
with an intensification of that ;-.'
comb peculiarity of hi-e:'unri;i!i :; :
expect some enterprising Y.mi;--'? :ll:
Mealing olf with me in tiie same w.r .
i.fthe-e t'tays " Whether the --:
relished the joke or not our i: : t. '
failed to depose. They w ere,
in no humor for jokes. 1 hey ;:rf
the l.i.hhy prison, where, it is h-T !
v iil be kept until otir gallant in. ii :
by them as "gnenilias" and ci nv.'i
chains and dungeons on that pr-.'K"::.-o, 5
I'v leased.
Obituary.
CAKDIN.M. NICHOLAS VVISKMAN
ly the List arrival from Ei.rc!" :
have intelligen -e of the deatlt of Car-!--Viseman.
Though of English pare
age, he was born in Seville, in l!"
He was sent to England when five
old, wlter.- he remained at school, C
1818, when, going to Home, he bee?,
one of the first members of the then r
I3' resUired English college lh-
grtiduated 1). D., at the age of tvv
two, and adpoiuted professor tf the
ental languages in the Human I "uive
in 1S7, when he was made rector
English college. During last
published his JIni Sjntrrc, cht. i '
from Oriental MSS, iu the Va;;e::io
ry. LVtn.niiigto England i:i Is-'-soon
lK-came cehbraSed as a pn-nii-"
lecturer. In the two h-Howing v.'"
jml.lislied several the'oieal t.-eatis
1S!() he was made bishop and "
signed to the presidency of St. "
ollcge, Oscot , and iii 1SI'. !if
made vicar apostolic of the I.ni'i"5 J'
trict. On the restoration in Is" '''
Pope -f the English hierarchy. Do v' ;
man wa ajoin!el archbishop e!
minister, and 0:1 the follovvin-z -1 ' '
raised to Ihedi-nitv of a cardain! v
his elevation to the cardinalate ' ' '
published n great number of c-shvn
mons, lectures, and dissertati 'tis
ecclesiastical subject. His I'.mtf -Inn
protninently placed, of h'te, n "
list as the probable successor to t!"' I1
chair.